CD: Dark They Were And Golden Eyed - Design Your Dreams | reviews, news & interviews
CD: Dark They Were And Golden Eyed - Design Your Dreams
CD: Dark They Were And Golden Eyed - Design Your Dreams
Underground polymath Trevor Jackson pushes his self-releasing to preposterous levels
At three decades deep in the creative industries, it's fair to say Trevor Jackson is a renaissance man.
Now, he's launching a new label, Pre-, with no less than four albums of his own material, new and old, in the space of a month. From almost anyone else, this would seem like ego self-massaging of the most preposterous order, but somehow Jackson makes it feel OK. This record is four long tracks, apparently new, of undulating modular synthesiser sound with occasional drums, that could have come from a German commune in 1974 or a lost Italian sci-fi movie in 1983, but is completely absorbing from start to end, the 31-minute “Boundary Echoes” and all.
This month we've already had an aggro synthpop-techno album from the electroclash era as Pinklunch, next week there's a detuned ambient record by his From alias, and after that again there's one from his late-90s hip hop beat production nom de guerre, Underdog. And you know what? They're good too. But the wonderful thing is not that this shows Jackson as some crazed savant, but that he's just an exemplar of underground values. This stuff isn't being pumped out to satisfy his ego, it's because he truly enjoys feeding the subcultural machine. As should we all. It's a privileged position to have, to be able to release half a dozen albums of your own music in a year, but if you've put in the decades of work to get to that position – why not?
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